The Herald (South Africa)

No sight of Zuma in Tshwane

- Justice Malala

THERE is a lot to digest in the aftermath of what happened in Tshwane last week. It will take a long time to process all the themes, but here are some of my thoughts, randomly, focusing on various failures of this sorry episode.

We need to understand what happened to ensure it does not happen again.

Follow the money: who benefits from the chaos that was unleashed by members of the ANC last week in Tshwane?

Why would people be so obsessed – to the point of killing fellow human beings and their own comrades, and destroying their own infrastruc­ture – with ensuring that one person stays in power?

It is because these are people who fear that a change in regime will bring about the closing of the corruption tap. They will do anything to keep their snouts in the trough.

They will kill, they will destroy, they will maim the innocent. These are people who have no skills, no talent.

A loss of power by their chosen leader means the end of their livelihood­s.

A grouping that has benefited from municipal tenders in Tshwane, particular­ly those who run a public works programme that hires young people at about R80 a day to clean the streets of the city, told these young people to unleash the havoc that took place last week or else they would lose their jobs if mayor Kgosientsh­o Ramokgopa was ejected.

This operation, known as “Vat Alles (Take All)”, has been responsibl­e for chaos.

It is now a killing force, deployed to force through a small elite’s wishes through violence.

If police follow this programme they will get to the ultimate kingpin of the violence last week.

The police come late, if they come at all:

how could the intelligen­ce services and the SA Police Services not know what was about to happen in Tshwane?

Last Saturday, State Security Minister David Mahlobo was in Tshwane, swanning around and talking to ANC branch leaders.

Why? His intelligen­ce officers should have been sniffing out what was happening.

On Sunday evening June 19, when ANC members shot and killed each other at the Tshwane Events Centre, where were Mahlobo’s “intelligen­ce” agents?

In the week pictures appeared in the media of Mahlobo swanning about in Mabopane and other parts. What does he think he is, exactly?

A celebrity? Where, crucially, were his spies? Nowhere to be found. Don’t be fooled by the arrests that have been made. The police have arrested the low-level, drug-addled looters.

The mastermind­s? I was in Tshwane on Friday and, believe me, I am told they are living the life and laughing their way to the next lucrative position.

The events of the past week are about a failure of policing and a failure of intelligen­ce.

Police stood by and did nothing on Sunday, Monday, Tuesday and Wednesday.

Why? Ask residents of Mamelodi, Atteridgev­ille, Mabopane and Hammanskra­al and you will hear the same thing – the police helped loot many spaza shops.

The protectors have become the criminals.

The truth that got lost in the fire:

Thoko Didiza is one of the most upstanding, fair, competent, principled and capable people that the ANC has deployed in any capacity since 1994. She is honest, straight and true.

Ask any MP who has worked with her in any capacity – from the miniscule PAC and Azapo straight through to the DA – and they will tell you just how fair and competent she is.

She is not perfect, of course, but in choosing her for Tshwane mayoral candidate the ANC’s leadership did the party’s terrible campaign in that municipali­ty a huge favour.

Sadly, those within the ANC who sought to undermine her used tribalism, sexism and slander to run her down.

A great candidate has been undermined and the party will be the one to suffer. Given their anti-democratic actions this week, the ANC’s Tshwane leadership deserves to lose.

They cannot be trusted with leading our capital city.

Where was the ANC leadership?

Crucially,

where was President Jacob Zuma?

Look, some of us have given up on Zuma ever showing any kind of spine.

The man is not a leader, yet one expects him to at least pretend to care for the nation. This past week his voice was nowhere to be found.

Instead, Tshwane leaders ran around being ineffectua­l.

Failure of leadership creates a void and so the people who were in leadership this past week were those who started the fire and nurtured it into the firestorm we saw.

The fire in Tshwane raged for four days because Zuma and his senior leaders were nowhere to be found.

When their people needed them, they were silent, hiding from their responsibi­lities.

We are neither safe nor secure under their leadership.

I have no doubt that we will see more violence in Tshwane and other parts of South Africa due to ANC infighting and contestati­on for positions.

Will our leaders, our police services, our intelligen­ce services be ready and prepared?

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